| Jeb, the Ambivalent Bush 	'Dynasty' may prove a lesser complication than his views on education and foreign policy. 
 
  By
 Peggy Noonan
 
 April 10, 2014 4:20 p.m. ET
 Early in the 2012 presidential cycle, a  friend and former  staffer of Jeb                                                          Bush                                                 observed to me,  bitterly, that this smart, capable man wasn't  included in the names of  potential GOP nominees for only one reason: His  name was Bush. I said  that's true, but it's also true that he got his  chance in politics  because his name was Bush. He inherited the fame, the  money lines and  support, and made a career of them. There's a rough  justice in life,  you have to roll with it.
 
 But  public attitudes toward the Bush  name have been changing. George H.W.  Bush is increasingly acknowledged  as a great diplomat, a patriot, a  steady and sophisticated president,  an exemplar of the greatest  generation. When I say he should have won a  Nobel Prize for his work in  the days after the Soviet Union, and  during the reunification of  Germany, people are no longer startled and  usually nod in agreement.                                                              George W. Bush,                                                  for his part, is the  object of increased public affection, and  it's not just the paintings.  Those who disagreed with him and opposed  his decisions now readily  concede his humor and warmth, his fortitude  and the fact that you could  count on him to stand on his word.
 
 As for the dynasty question, it would obviously be muted if                                                             Hillary Clinton                                                  gets in the race and is  the Democratic nominee. We can still be  depressed about that—dynasties  are not like us—but the Democrats won't  be able to use it.
 
 The  Republican  establishment, such as it is, has the right to back Jeb if  they think he  can win. The grass-roots has the right to oppose him. Let  it be a fight  if he chooses it.
 
 What is jelling into  a  cliché is true: Jeb Bush's problem is not immigration per se. That   issue is still dynamic; people are arguing and thinking it through. Jeb   has an argument to make. When he told an interviewer last weekend that   some illegal immigration can be seen as "an act of love," I read of it   and assumed it was an act of phony eloquence—insufficient, tin-eared, a   sign that he'd grown rusty. But then I saw the interview. It was clear   he was simply expressing a sincere respect for, and a kind of bond  with,  immigrants who have crossed the border to get the job that will  feed  the family. I thought of how I would experience his comments if I  were  here illegally or had a family member who was. I'd appreciate it, a  lot.  I'd hear what he said as a signal of empathy and understanding.  I'd  think he was saying "have a heart," which is what                                                              Rick Perry                                                  said in 2012. And  that's not the worst thing a Republican could say right now, is it?
 
 Jeb  Bush's real problem, and not just with members of the tea party,  is his  early and declared support for the Common Core national school   curriculum. He decided to back federal standards for what should be   taught in the public schools at the exact moment the base of the   Republican Party had had it up to here with federal anything.
 
 
 
 
 A year ago I attended a  meetin0in  which Jeb spoke of his support for the core to conservative  education  policy intellectuals. When told the subject of the meeting, I  was  confused: He's for Common Core or against it? For it? Really? In  what  abstract universe are conservative intellectuals operating?  Federal  standards for what should be taught in the classroom would  immediately  be received with skepticism by parents who, year after year  now, have  seen their children turned into test-taking monkeys. They  are taught to  the test, and the tests seem to exist so that school  systems can claim  achievement. What used to be called the joy of  learning gets crowded  out. Moreover, some parents, maybe a lot, would  assume any new education  scheme would be administered by the education  establishment, meaning a  lot of                                                          Lois                                                  Lerners—apparatchiks, ideologues, politicos. Federal programs  like Race  to the Top and No Child Left Behind always mean well, but  maybe the  answer to our education woes won't come from the federal  level.
 
 Parenthetically I note that  conversations with public-school teachers  the past few years have  reminded me how lucky I was, in high school in  the 1960s, not to be  surrounded by people who insisted I excel. They  let us choose our own  speed. I don't remember being hounded by tests,  which was lucky because I  didn't do my homework or test well. But I  felt free to spend all my  time reading good books and pondering things.  I didn't always attend  school, but I did experience the joy of  learning. The indifference of  the educational establishment was a great  gift to me. It allowed me to  get an education.
 
 At any rate,  there is  surely a growing sense that if you want standards, you should  establish  them locally, with local groups fighting out whether more  attention  should be given to                                                          Thomas Jefferson                                                  than                                                          Samuel Gompers.                                                 No state  wants stupid students. No parents want dumb kids. It  will work itself  out—awkwardly and imperfectly, like life.
 
 *** But  back to Jeb  Bush. I have no idea if he's running, and neither perhaps  does he. It  would probably be a hard psychological question. He has seen  the  presidency up close and seen all the muck a family has to deal with  on  the way to the glory. That muck has only grown deeper since his  father  and brother ran. It would be surprising if he were not ambivalent  about  the enterprise. All his adult life his family has been in the   spotlight: He knows the sting of undeserved criticism and the   embarrassment of unearned praise. He knows what it is to see people you   love attacked and not be able to answer because answering isn't classy.
 
 Beyond  that there is the father-brother thing, which is the  foreign-policy  question. His father is now seen as a foreign-policy  realist. He was  prudent after the end of the Soviet Union, he was  tactful, and when he  felt he had to go to war in Kuwait he built a  world-wide coalition, did  the job he said he would do, and stopped when  that job was done. Jeb's  brother is associated with neoconservatism:  Be daring, break the  tectonic plates, force the realities to  reconstitute themselves in new  and better ways, invade, spread  democracy.
 
 Where  does Jeb stand? What philosophical assumptions  guide his decisions?  Whichever policy view he declares will seem like  an implicit rebuke of  someone he loves.
 
 Democrats are never   forced to answer these questions because they are not expected to have a   philosophy, only political exigencies. But Republicans are forced to   answer, in debates run by a mainstream media looking for sport. And the   question is more than a question about policy intellectuals and their   preferences, it's also a choice between the party's suburban wing and   its Born Fightin' wing.
 
 It will all be  complicated. But if you  really want the presidency, you accept the  complications. You can't  run ambivalently. Mr. Bush knows this, of  course, which is why he talks  about only running if he feels the joy of  it.
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